Edmonton Journal

Pot firms seek to become ethical darlings

- Kristine Owram

A group of 45 companies operating in the cannabis industry has crafted a set of standards that they hope could one day transform them from sin stocks into ESG darlings.

Pot stocks are mostly held by retail investors but the industry is realizing that it needs to have an environmen­tal, social and governance framework in place to attract wary institutio­nal investors like pension funds.

We’re in a highly regulated environmen­t and we’d like our regulator to have a more liberal approach to the industry.

A group called the Global Cannabis Partnershi­p announced that it’s created an ESG framework that will look at issues ranging from greenhouse gas emissions to product safety to ethical conduct.

“The hope is that this will be to cannabis what Fair Trade is to coffee,” Lara Wood, chair of the Global Cannabis Partnershi­p advisory board, told the World Cannabis Congress in New Brunswick on Tuesday.

Members range from pot firms such as Canopy Growth Corp. and Aphria Inc. to government agencies and law firms, and represent countries from Canada to Australia, the U.K. and Israel. They have a year to apply for certificat­ion from global accounting firm EY.

The goal was to be proactive in creating standards for the industry rather than waiting until it’s facing some scandal, said Rick Petersen, who authored the standards.

“All it takes is one bad actor to bring a whole industry down,” he said.

The hope is that setting higher goalposts for industry behaviour will help attract more global institutio­nal investors, the majority of which are now including ESG criteria in their investment decisions, according to EY.

Another benefit may be getting regulators to trust the industry more and take a lighter touch in the future, said Terry Lake, vice-president of corporate and social responsibi­lity at Hexo Corp., which is a member of the Global Cannabis Partnershi­p.

“We’re in a highly regulated environmen­t and we’d like our regulator to have a more liberal approach to the industry, and the only way they’re going to do that is if we demonstrat­e this very high standard,” he said.

 ?? Da x Melmer/files ?? The cannabis sector wants to attract wary institutio­nal investors.
Da x Melmer/files The cannabis sector wants to attract wary institutio­nal investors.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada